The Renaissance Began in 1000

Of course, "ages" are constructs of historians, and no one at the time ever woke up and said, "Honey, guess what: the Middle Ages began this morning!"

But if we want to point to a time when the revival of Europe after the disappearance of the Western Roman Empire really began, we could do a lot worse than say, "1000 A. D."

As of the year 1000, the population of France was around 6 million, and Germany about 4 million. By 1300, both those numbers had roughly tripled, with France at around 19 million and Germany 12 million. And at the same time, there were great migrations from these areas into Iberia, Poland, and the Baltic region. The period saw improved farming techniques, the creation of the modern university, the foundations laid for modern science, the building of many great cathedrals, the rediscovery of much lost Greek thought, and the beginning of Europe's re-urbanization.

Then a small problem, the Black Death, struck, wiping out about half of Europe's population. The population peaks of the early 1300s were not reached again until about 1500. If not for the Black Death, we would no doubt view European history as an "ascent" from 1000 on.

I'm not married to any particular timeline of "the Renaissance," mind you. Like you say, such references are all constructs.

If I wanted to contest your dating, I might try to pin down some essential differences in the pre-Plague and post-Plague advances. For example, I might claim a pre-Plague "Renaissance" characterized by the early Scholastics using e.g. Aristotelian thought to justify the Catholic faith, and the post-Plague "Renaissance" subsisting in an increasingly faith-independent set of advances using the same tools (benefiting from an independence-booster with the invention of the printing press, which tended to break the grip of the church on written knowledge).

But I do see your general point on "backwardness." Yes, the period from 1000 on was a period of advancement.

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